ROGUECLASSICIST’S BULLETIN March 31, 2025

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LEGENDA
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First person from “Year 0” unearthed in an extraordinary grave and stumble upon a mysterious word – AS USA
https://en.as.com/latest_news/first-person-from-year-0-unearthed-in-an-extraordinary-grave-and-stumble-upon-a-mysterious-word-n/

In Ancient Greece and Rome, who were the harpies, and why did they stink so much?
https://theconversation.com/in-ancient-greece-and-rome-who-were-the-harpies-and-why-did-they-stink-so-much-249722

Archaeologists Uncover First Evidence Of Epic Biblical Battle “Armageddon” At Megiddo

Archaeologists Uncover First Evidence of Epic Biblical Battle “Armageddon” at Megiddo

[AI?]Did Roman historians mark the crucifixion of Jesus? – The Jerusalem Post
https://www.jpost.com/archaeology/archaeology-around-the-world/article-848111

[AI?]Homeric jug reveals wine was an everyday drink in Troy – The Jerusalem Post
https://www.jpost.com/archaeology/archaeology-around-the-world/article-848102

[AI?]Rare Roman coin of Emperor Vitellius sells for £4,700 – The Jerusalem Post
https://www.jpost.com/archaeology/archaeology-around-the-world/article-848274

Ancient Tomb with Gladiator Epitaph Discovered in Italy | TheCollector
https://www.thecollector.com/ancient-tomb-gladiator-epitaph-discovered-italy/

Unlocking the secrets of Roman Hispania: Rare coin mold found – The Jerusalem Post
https://www.jpost.com/archaeology/archaeology-around-the-world/article-848106

Abydos tomb: Penn Museum and Egyptian Archaeologists report

Abydos tomb: Penn Museum and Egyptian Archaeologists report

Why Catullus Continues to Seduce Us | The New Yorker
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2025/04/07/catullus-poems-book-review-stephen-mitchell-isobel-williams

Monsters of Rome: do emperors such as Nero and Caligula deserve their reputations? | HistoryExtra
https://www.historyextra.com/membership/monsters-rome-emperors-reputation-tom-holland/

Ephemeris ~ CONCUSSIO BIRMANICA
https://ephemerisnuntii.eu/nuntius.php?id=2427

Alex Lyras’ Aristotle/Alexander Play Premieres in Los Angeles – GreekReporter.com

Alex Lyras’ Aristotle/Alexander Play Premieres in Los Angeles

Hofstra Drama Puts a Modern Spin on an Ancient Greek Tragedy | News | Hofstra University, New York
https://news.hofstra.edu/2025/03/31/hofstra-drama-puts-a-modern-spin-on-an-ancient-greek-tragedy/

Theatre Performance: Ismene-A New Greek Tragedy – Truckee Meadows Community College
https://www.tmcc.edu/calendar/2025/04/25/theatre-performance-ismene-new-greek-tragedy

Only Bad Dudes Want Statues in the First Place – SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE

Only Bad Dudes Want Statues in the First Place

Back to RGTO: Reading Tragedy Together When Sheltering Alone – SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE

Back to RGTO: Reading Tragedy Together When Sheltering Alone

The Odyssey, Book 22 parts 1-2 | Greek Myth Comix
https://greekmythcomix.com/comic/the-odyssey-book-22-parts-1-2/

Hoe reconstrueer je een tempel? – Mainzer Beobachter

Hoe reconstrueer je een tempel?

Weekly Varia no. 124, 03/30/25 – Noodlings

Weekly Varia no. 124, 03/30/25

AWOL – The Ancient World Online: Αncient Greek II: A 21st-Century Approach
https://ancientworldonline.blogspot.com/2025/03/ncient-greek-ii-21st-century-approach.html

PaleoJudaica.com: Review panel on Neis, When a Human Gives Birth to a Raven (3-4)
https://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/2025/03/review-panel-on-neis-when-human-gives_31.html

PaleoJudaica.com: Podcast interview with Emanuel Tov on the scribes of Qumran
https://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/2025/03/podcast-interview-with-emanuel-tov-on.html

PaleoJudaica.com: Kitchen obituary
https://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/2025/03/kitchen-obituary.html

Neglected architectural decoration from the late antique city: public porticoes, small baths, shops/workshops, and ‘middle class’ houses in the east Mediterranean – Bryn Mawr Classical Review

Neglected architectural decoration from the late antique city: public porticoes, small baths, shops/workshops, and ‘middle class’ houses in the east Mediterranean

Die epigraphische Kultur an Oberrhein und Neckar in römischer Zeit – Bryn Mawr Classical Review

Die epigraphische Kultur an Oberrhein und Neckar in römischer Zeit

From Hannibal to Sulla: the birth of civil war in Republican Rome – Bryn Mawr Classical Review

From Hannibal to Sulla: the birth of civil war in Republican Rome


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AUDIENDA
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(5) March 2025 Q&A – by Jordan Galczynski and Kara Cooney
https://ancientnow.substack.com/p/march-2025-q-and-a?utm_source=podcast-email&publication_id=752411&post_id=159566917&utm_campaign=email-play-on-substack&utm_content=listen_now_button&r=q7tlq&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email

The Case of the Late Iron Age Building in the Middle of the Desert Filled With Dead Young Women Probably Going to Yemen for Unclear and Possibly Unsavory Reasons, or Worst Vacation Ever? | This Week in the Ancient Near East
https://thisweekintheancientneareast.podbean.com/e/the-case-of-thelateironagebuilding-in-themiddle-ofthedesert-filled-with-dead-youngwomenprobablygoingto-yemenfor-unclear-andpossiblyunsavory-reasons-or/

Versus: The Cimbrian War I by Deep into History

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VIDENDA
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(892) Strade, santuari e domus tra Palatino e Velia nella media età repubblicana (IV-III secolo a.C.) – YouTube

(892) The Celtiberian Warrior | Warriors of History – YouTube

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NOTANDA
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Studentship in Roman History or Latin Language and Literature

Studentship in Roman History or Latin Language and Literature

Assistant Professor in Egyptian Archaeology (ARCH_01) job with DURHAM UNIVERSITY | 390848
https://www.timeshighereducation.com/unijobs/listing/390848/assistant-professor-in-egyptian-archaeology-arch_01-/

3-year Visiting Assistant Professor of Classics | Society for Classical Studies
https://www.classicalstudies.org/placement-service/2024-2025/39044/3-year-visiting-assistant-professor-classics

Assessing the Sacred Significance of Figurative Terracottas

Assessing the Sacred Significance of Figurative Terracottas

The Conversation: In Ancient Greece and Rome, who were the harpies, and why did they stink so much?

Krikkiat / Shutterstock.com

Kitty Smith, University of Sydney

Once yelled at women seen to be pestering or annoying – or at feminists questioning and threatening the status quo – “harpy” has long been used as a derogatory term targeting women.

But have you ever wondered what a harpy was in the first place?

Much like similar derogatory titles “siren” and “fury”, the term “harpy” is derived from a group of monstrous female figures from ancient Greek and Roman mythology.

This picture depicts the harpies being driven from the table of King Phineus, a story told in the Argonautica by Apollonius of Rhodes, in which Jason and the Argonauts search for the golden fleece.
This picture depicts the harpies being driven from the table of King Phineus, a story told in the Argonautica by Apollonius of Rhodes, in which Jason and the Argonauts search for the golden fleece.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Rogers Fund, 1967

Who were the harpies?

In Greek and Roman myth, the harpies were a group of animal-human hybrid monsters on par with other such mythological creatures like the sirens, the sphinx, and the centaurs.

Harpies were commonly imagined as an amalgam of a bird’s body, such as wings and claws, with a woman’s head.

The ancient story of the Aeneid, by Latin poet Virgil, describes the story’s hero Aeneas encountering harpies on his quest to found Rome, saying:

Maiden faces have these birds, foulest filth they drop, clawed hands are theirs, and faces ever gaunt with hunger.

This description matches a common design from Greek and Roman art of birds with women’s heads.

In Greco-Roman myth, the harpies were typically tasked with meting out justice on behalf of Zeus and other gods by using their great speed from their wings and sharp talons.

The importance of their claws was likely a result of their name, which was derived from the Ancient Greek word for “snatching” (ἁρπάζω or harpazdo).

As was common of many mythological figures with hybrid features, the way their animal features were portrayed tended to vary across different media (art or literature), different narrative purposes, and over time.

Sometimes the claws were emphasised; other times it was their supernaturally swift wings and voracious hunger.

Harpies were a common motif in many parts of the world. This roughly 12th Century statue is from modern-day Iran.
Harpies were also a common motif in many parts of the Muslim world. This roughly 12th Century statue is from modern-day Iran.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Cora Timken Burnett Collection of Persian Miniatures and Other Persian Art Objects, Bequest of Cora Timken Burnett, 1956

Enforcers of swift justice

The harpies were not nice people. They existed in myth to dish out punishments from the gods.

Their primary target? Phineus, a seer and king of Salmydessus in Thrace, a city believed to have been located on the Western coast of the Black Sea near the modern day Turkish town of Kıyıköy.

His story is told in the Argonautica by ancient Greek author Apollonius of Rhodes. This tale centres on the journey of Jason and the Argonauts in search of the golden fleece.

In the story, Phineus is said to have abused his powers as a seer by sharing too many of the gods’ secrets with mortals.

This was among the most egregious of crimes in the eyes of the gods, so an especially awful punishment was decided upon.

Phineus was blinded and given the dubious gift of immortality while still allowed to age endlessly. And worst of all, he was set upon by the harpies.

Every time Phineus picked up and tried to eat food, the harpies would burst out from the clouds, moving as fast as lightning, and

with their crooked beaks incessantly snatched the food away from his mouth and hands.

The harpies brought a further gift for Phineus: their smell. This supernaturally “intolerable stench” could putrefy food, so any scraps the harpies didn’t grab were left rotting on the table. You couldn’t even stand near it, “so foully reeked the remnants of the meal”.

And while the harpies swooped in and out in seconds, their smell stuck to the rotting food (and probably poor Phineus).

Some ancient poets add a little extra zest and disgust by also suggesting the harpies may have been defecating on the food, and presumably Phineus.

Most notable is Virgil in his text the Aeneid who wrote about “foedissima ventris proluvies”, meaning:

the foulest discharges from their bellies.

This was likely an exaggeration of their bird-like qualities, used to emphasise how disgusting and monstrous they were.

Phineus was eventually given a reprieve from the harpies, by order of Zeus, so he could help the hero Jason on his quest for the golden fleece.

Having completed their job, the harpies then flew to Crete to live in a cave far away from annoying mortals – only being disturbed once by Aeneas on his meandering path to Rome.

The story of Phineus helped harpies become a metaphor for greed.

Those compared to harpies could include greedy house-guests overstaying their welcome, people living extravagantly or frivolously, or even family members taking advantage of wealthy relatives.

Although the harpies were female monsters, the term was not exclusively applied to women, but used to describe groups of greedy people.

Harpies were often associated with greed. In this Renaissance painting, part of a series depicting the Seven Deadly Sins, a harpy-drawn chariot is being used by Gluttony (who has wings, carries a jug and and wears wine leaves in her hair).
Harpies were often associated with greed. In this Renaissance painting, part of a series depicting the Seven Deadly Sins, a harpy-drawn chariot is being used by Gluttony (who has wings, carries a jug and and wears wine leaves in her hair).
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of Mrs. Frederic R. Coudert Jr., in memory of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh A. Murray, 1957.

Harpies today

Happily, today the title of “harpy” is falling out of favour as a derogatory term. But the hordes of monstrous, snatching, winged women live on in modern books, games, comics, movies and TV shows.

From video games with swathes of harpy-like creatures snatching and clawing at the protagonist, like the 2020 video game Hades, to characters in stories inspired by Greek and Roman myth, the harpies are sticking around – like a bad smell.The Conversation

Kitty Smith, PhD Candidate in Classical Greek and Roman History, University of Sydney

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.